Interesting....
Question: If Biblical Infallibility was not an Early view of the church, how did they interpret 2 Timothy 3:15-17? It says the Scripture is "God-breathed." How can God breathe something with errors?
I didn't say biblical infallibility wasn't a view of the early church. I said they didn't think that the Bible is the source for all doctrine. That's not the same thing.
In fact the church fathers generally operated on the assumption that everything in the Bible was true (in some sense), on the basis that the Bible came from God. I don't think this was because of the 2 Tim verse, though - it was more because they instinctively treated the Bible in the same way that pagans treated the poets. The 2 Tim verse is an expression of this view rather than the source of it (pagan authors similarly talked of the gods "inspiring" Homer and Hesiod, speaking through them just as a musician plays an instrument).
But although the church fathers thought everything in the Bible was true, they still didn't see it as the source for all doctrine (a notion which you won't find in the Bible). They saw it as
part of the "Rule of Faith", which also included the (oral) teachings of the apostles and the teachings of the apostolic churches.
Maybe they applied logic (*gasp*) and deducted that Paul could not possibly have meant the New Testament as that did not even exist at the time of the writing of 2 Timothy?
Edit: Which brings up a question of my own: What did the writer of 2 Timothy likely refer to as "scripture"? The Torah? The Septuagint? Anything else?
Or is it mistranslated in protestant translations and should rather read "all scripture inspired by God is [...]"?
I'm sure that "all scripture is inspired..." is the proper translation, but of course you're right that it leaves open the question what "scripture" refers to. It's not impossible that books we think of as the New Testament are included - 1 Tim 5:18 apparently cites a saying from Luke as "scripture", and 2 Peter 3:16 refers to Paul's letters as "scripture". (2 Peter was written a lot later than 1 Timothy, though.) But even if solely Jewish books are meant, there was no "canon" corresponding to the Old Testament at this time. Jews generally treated any sufficiently ancient-seeming book as authoritative and did not draw a strict line between "canon" and "non-canon". I would suspect that the author of 2 Timothy is thinking along the same lines, although he's thinking of the books in question in a more pagan than Jewish way (as mentioned above).
Do you know anything about the veneration of Pontius Pilate by Ethiopian Christians?
Not much, beyond the basic fact that he is so revered and I believe has a feast day. This reflects the ancient Christian belief that Pilate was a pretty decent character, a belief that developed in the first and second centuries as anti-Jewish views developed. The more the Jews were blamed for Jesus' death, the less Pilate was, and the more he was presented as a victim of circumstance. You can see this trend in the New Testament itself, if you compare Mark's presentation of Pilate with Matthew's, and then John's. It continues outside the New Testament in books such as the Acts of Pilate, in which Pilate is the hero. Tertullian, writing at the end of the second century, thought that Pilate was really a Christian.
This is probably way to general of a question, but based of accumulated writings by various theologians, how theologicaly 'sound' is Born Again Christianity? From what I have gathered it is similar to Evangelicalism, but with a far greater emphasis on an individual relation with Jesus/God to save your soul.
I have always taken "Born Again Christianity" to be just another name for Evangelicalism. Evangelicalism pretty much revolves around the idea of the individual's relation with God through Jesus, and the need for a personal conversion experience, so it's hard to see how there could be a greater emphasis than that.
http://forums.civfanatics.com/showthread.php?t=420768&page=34
What do you make of the debate in this thread? Who has the more valid view, me or El Mac? And more importantly, where did Ancient Theologians stand?
I'm afraid I would say that El Mac's view is much more biblical (at least much more in line with Jesus' teachings as presented in the Gospels), and certainly far more in line with the ancient theologians, who were absolutely unequivocal in their condemnation of all violence and killing, whatever the circumstances. This is why ancient Christians were unanimously opposed to abortion, exposition of infants, capital punishment, gladiatorial combat, and war, and why Christians who were soldiers were not allowed to hold officer rank since they might have to order executions or other violent acts (and many Christians thought that Christians shouldn't be soldiers at all in the first place). Of course, once the Roman empire itself converted to Christianity, all o these views began to get rather watered down.
I'd say, though, that in my view trying to base a system of ethics upon the New Testament, let alone upon the words of Jesus, is always going to be problematic, because they don't constitute a system of ethics. Jesus doesn't explicitly say what one should do in all kinds of situations. So one cannot use his teachings as any more than, at most, the
basis for a system of ethics which goes beyond what he actually says. This is why some twentieth-century Christian moralists, notably the situation ethicists and (I think) Karl Barth, argued that to be true to Jesus' teaching you shouldn't try to construct a system of ethics at all. You should just take to heart the basic principle of love - of God and neighbour - and then work out what to do in each situation as it comes up, following the spirit of love, rather than trying to work out rules in advance. On this view, the Christian moralist wouldn't say "This is wrong" or "That is wrong" - he or she would just react in a loving way when faced with the actual situation.
I'd add that Jesus' action in the Temple probably wasn't an act of violence anyway. It is more likely to have been a prophetic action. By turning over the tables, he symbolically prophesied the future destruction of the Temple itself. E. P. Sanders makes the nice point that it would have been rather irrational to object to the presence of the moneychangers anyway; it was perfectly logical to have moneychangers there, since people came to the Temple from all over the civilised world and were carrying all different kinds of currency. It was also perfectly logical to have people selling sacrificial animals there, since again, people were arriving from all over the place and could hardly be expected to carry live animals all that way. There's no evidence that the moneychangers or the animal sellers were dishonest; given that there was a Temple guard and the place was closely watched by the high priest and by the Romans this would have been unlikely anyway. So the traditional interpretation of Jesus' action as an angry reaction to corruption in the Temple seems rather unlikely.
Isn't 2 Timothy almost universally excepted to be a fabrication?
It's certainly not by Paul, if that's what you mean. That doesn't make it not part of the Bible, though.